English Literature - Read Mode

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A
Neil Armstrong
B
Edward White
C
Yuri Gagarin
D
Allen Shepherd

Explanation

Neil Armstrong said this famous line (correctly 'That's one small step for [a] man...') upon becoming the first person to walk on the Moon in 1969.

A
Richard Nixon
B
John F. Kennedy
C
Franklin D Roosevelt
D
Ronald Reagan

Explanation

This quote is from John F. Kennedy's inaugural address on January 20, 1961, emphasizing the need for diplomacy and strength in the Cold War.

A
Rousseau
B
Keats
C
Lord Mansfield
D
Stuart Mill

Explanation

Jean-Jacques Rousseau wrote this famous opening line in 'The Social Contract' (1762), arguing that modern states repress the physical freedom of humans.

A
John Keats
B
William Wordsworth
C
John Milton
D
William Shakespeare

Explanation

This is the famous opening line of John Keats's poem 'Endymion', published in 1818, which reflects his Romantic philosophy of aesthetics.

A
Shakespeare
B
Keats
C
Bacon
D
Kyd

Explanation

Sir Francis Bacon wrote this in his essay 'Of Studies', concisely describing the different benefits of reading, conversation, and writing.

A
P. B. Shelley
B
Jhon Keats
C
Coleridge
D
Lord Byron

Explanation

This line is from 'The Rime of the Ancient Mariner' by Samuel Taylor Coleridge, emphasizing the importance of loving all of God's creation.

A
The cloud
B
Adonias
C
Ode to the west wind
D
To a Skylark

Explanation

This optimistic line is the very last sentence of Percy Bysshe Shelley's poem 'Ode to the West Wind', symbolizing hope and rebirth after suffering.

A
Joseph Addison
B
Dr. Johnson
C
Charles Lamb
D
Francis Bacon

Explanation

This famous quote is found in Francis Bacon's essay 'Of Studies', distinguishing between books meant for quick reading versus deep study.

A
Shakespeare
B
Wordsworth
C
Keats
D
Eliot

Explanation

These lines appear in the concluding stanza of John Keats's 'Ode on a Grecian Urn', summarizing the relationship between art, truth, and beauty.

A
P. B. Shelley
B
Jhon Keats
C
Henry David Thoreau
D
Sir Winston Churchill

Explanation

This line is from P.B. Shelley's poem 'To a Skylark', suggesting that the most beautiful human art often stems from sadness and suffering.